THE MAKING OF THE DAM BUSTERS | Documentary

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  • čas přidán 24. 07. 2024
  • Michael Anderson’s 1954 drama captures the tension and bravery of an audacious raid on the center of Nazi Germany’s industrial complex and the quintessentially English combination of inventiveness and dogged determination. Split into two distinct sections, the film deals first with the fraught, but ultimately successful development of a new weapon by Dr. Barnes N. Wallis (Michael Redgrave).
    The Dam Busters is available now in 4K on Prime - www.amazon.co.uk/gp/video/det...
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Komentáře • 526

  • @michaelalexander2306
    @michaelalexander2306 Před 3 lety +75

    Great video. One detail I heard of was the the dog who played Gibson's dog in the film was an Army dog of the same name. Richard Todd, himself a dog-lover, asked his handler to 'borrow' the dog, so he could build a rapport with him - something you can see in the film. He was even allowed to have the dog stay with him at the White Hart hotel in Lincoln, where they stayed during filming. Unheard of in those days, at least one other black labrador has stayed there - my own assistance dog, Lyla.

    • @COIcultist
      @COIcultist Před 3 lety +6

      Not mentioned in the documentary ww2gravestone.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/download-31.jpg?f0589e&f0589e Racist? Who would call their dog after something they hated or despised? Britain had little to no experience of black people then other than men who had come to help our country fight a war. There was often problems with the American's treatment of their black troops off base. Does that sound racist?
      The bastards at the politically correct end of the MOD and RAF even desecrated a grave.
      www.thesun.co.uk/news/12143911/guy-gibson-dambusters-dog-name-labrador-grave-changed/
      www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-lincolnshire-53446494
      What do they now say was the codeword for a breaching of a dam?

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety +18

      @@COIcultist This is one of the main reasons why Peter Jackson cancelled the remake of The Dambusters a few years ago! The irony is that the people that would have taken offence by the name are the people who would be less likely to be interested in the movie in the first place!

    • @Kneichion
      @Kneichion Před 3 lety +3

      Sadly I found the dog being killed a bit upsetting. The movie is about death and life. I didn't feel it did anything & should have left it out.

    • @PenzancePete
      @PenzancePete Před 3 lety +7

      @@COIcultist What the snowflakes don't understand was that black things were often referred to as nigger. English is a Latin based language, the Latin word for black being nigreos. The Spanish for black is negro. Are you getting the idea? The word nigger comes from the southern U.S.A. pronunciation of negro (referring to a person's race) which was niggra. I'm from western Europe which makes me Caucasian, someone from China is Oriental)
      Gibson wasn't being racist when he called his black dog nigger, he was just reflecting the dog's colour.
      As for R.A.F. racism, compare how the R.A.F. pilots from Jamaica and Trinidad were treated compared with U.S.A.A.F. pilots of which the Americans stated that, "The black man will not have the skills to fly airplanes". The U.S. forces came to Britain and bought their racial inequality and apartheid with them.

    • @chrisbell5920
      @chrisbell5920 Před 3 lety +9

      @@PenzancePete > Thankyou to you sir for having the integrity and the personal honesty in relating history as near as humanly possible to actual names and events. No amount of political correctness, "wokeness" or cancel culture will ever change the name of the black labrador which was named Nigger by its distinguished owner for the simple reason of the colour of it's fur.
      No racism was implied nor meant by the name; the pretend-to-be-insulted-on-behalf-of-someone-else
      brigade no doubt would also refuse to wear the Poppy too.

  • @captaincrash9286
    @captaincrash9286 Před 3 lety +118

    Richard Todd described filming the final scene with Michael Redgrave in an interview. As he walked away from the camera he was quietly weeping. He had his own experience of letter writing. I never watch that scene without shedding a tear for the ordinary people who sacrificed and achieved so much in extraordinary times.

    • @redbird9658
      @redbird9658 Před 3 lety +8

      Amen.

    • @landoremick7422
      @landoremick7422 Před 3 lety +12

      Braver than we. Real courage is knowing you may not survive, but doing it regardless.

    • @googleit2824
      @googleit2824 Před 3 lety +4

      Might be mistaken but I don't think noel coward was in the Dambusters.

    • @stevengriffin7873
      @stevengriffin7873 Před 3 lety +5

      @MichaelKingsfordGray Spoken by a true hero,your bravery in the face of the enemy has been noted.

    • @PhilbyFavourites
      @PhilbyFavourites Před 3 lety +3

      @@stevengriffin7873 a put down worthy of a true Englishman. Sir, I salute you

  • @B-A-L
    @B-A-L Před 3 lety +31

    This movie always felt personal to me because Sir Harold 'Mick' Martin, the Australian pilot who was third in command of the raid and flew P For Popsy, was my father's commanding officer when he was based at RAF Nicosia in Cyprus in the 1960s. It was made all the more personal when I chose 617 Squadron as the subject of my extended history essay, which was as long as Paul Brickhill's book, for my History 'O' level in the 1980s and my mother wrote to Mick Martin to tell him about it and he wrote back with his appreciation and a copy of a Dambusters raid print signed with a personal message to me! She was also able to arrange a visit to 617 Squadron for me where I got to have lunch with some of the aircrew and had a personal tour of one of the glorious Vulcans they were flying at the time! God bless 617 Squadron, all who served in it and all who still do!

    • @theadventuresofred19
      @theadventuresofred19 Před rokem +1

      I met Micky martin at his house in Warwick Gardens and gave him a pewter Lancaster bomber. A really decent guy. Never to be forgotten.

    • @veronicabennett4359
      @veronicabennett4359 Před rokem +1

      Sir Harold 'Mick' Martin returned to Germany in the early 1970's when he became Commander-in-Chief RAF Germany.

  • @CaminoAir
    @CaminoAir Před rokem +6

    The losses suffered during this mission really hit home in the film and the stoic professionalism in the face of it. That's a tribute to the realism striven for by Michael Anderson and his cast and crew.

  • @lawrencemartin1113
    @lawrencemartin1113 Před 3 lety +44

    What a lovely documentary on this iconic film and war time mission. As a young boy, infatuated and obsessed with aviation (I still am!) and having been born only 17 years after the end of the Second World War, I was incredibly fortunate to discover that my older brother was at school with Barnes Wallis's two grandsons. (I think I was just about to leave my primary school at the time and join the same secondary school). He was also in a band with the older of the two. This led to a friendship between my family and theirs. One Sunday lunchtime, having been invited over to their house for the day with my parents while the 'boys' rehearsed their music, I found myself sitting next to the great Barnes Wallis himself, who was then living with his daughter, the mother of the two grandsons. I was completely overawed by the experience and my recollection of the day was of him being very kind to me and although by then an elderly man, he was gentle and calm and rather quiet. I have never forgotten that amazing opportunity. Tragically, a short while later, his younger grandson, Ricky, was killed in a terrible road accident on his way to our home, where he stayed with us once a week, having been to some late evening, extra classes at our school. I can remember that night so clearly and we never got over it. I can only imagine the terrible loss their family felt. The film is still one my favourite films but clearly has all sorts of deeper associations. Thank you to all involved in the making of this great documentary.

    • @JamesRichards-mj9kw
      @JamesRichards-mj9kw Před rokem

      The Chastise war crime was a complete failure, as Harris and Speer confirmed.

  • @ShevillMathers
    @ShevillMathers Před 3 lety +9

    👍🇬🇧🇦🇺🦘I joined the RAF in July 1956 and was so proud at the time-the film and the music was front and centre during this time. Recreating real events made it so special, even today at age 83, it feels like only last week. Fantastic to view this again to see how it was all done.

  • @redbird9658
    @redbird9658 Před 3 lety +37

    Hard to comprehend all Guy Gibsons achievements by the age of 25.

  • @karlwicking2328
    @karlwicking2328 Před 3 lety +29

    Really enjoyed the documentary. A film close to our hearts as the film editor was my wife's grandad.

  • @davidrowley8577
    @davidrowley8577 Před 4 lety +41

    THIS is one of my most favorite films....so THIS was a BIG TIME TREAT!

  • @wessexdruid7598
    @wessexdruid7598 Před rokem +6

    When I was an Air Cadet in the 70s, the annual pre-Christmas screening of 'The Dambusters' was a time-honoured event. Then in 1975, our Annual Camp was to Scampton - where we climbed aboard 617 Sqn Vulcans and visited the Sqn Museum, complete with all the scale models of the dams that had been built for the briefings. The gate guards at the time were Lancaster NX611 and a Grand Slam bomb. (It is a regularly repeated urban myth that the Grand Slam was found later still to have explosive in it..)

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 Před 3 měsíci +1

      There was a Live bomb next to a Gate Guard at Scampton, but it was found in 1958.

  • @scopex2749
    @scopex2749 Před rokem +5

    What a SUPERB ACCURATE documentary - thank you. I first saw this film when I was about 8 years old and THAT made me always want to sign up to the Royal Air Force. Such a dynamic powerful emotional film. I was amazed at the flying sequences and NOW know how it was all done. At 16 I signed up as an apprentice, to serve my Queen and country and joined the RAF as an aircraft engineer. We had a camp cinema and once we had all had our heads clipped and uniforms issued we were marched in the base cinema for a 'special duty'. We were sat down, the murmur died down and the curtains opened across the screen.........We were to watch "THE DAMBUSTERS".........apparently shown to ALL entries as their first movie!! Due to this film and the Battle of Britain I also now fly myself training to be a pilot. The real crews were my heroes and it was an honour to carry on a small part of the RAF's history. We actually lived next door to one of the pilots for several years! RIP to all those who were lost in this and other air missions. High Flight my brothers unto thees is glory given, "I slip the surly bonds of earth and danced the skies on laughter silvered wings"......Per Ardua Ad Astra - Thank you for our freedom today.✝

  • @salvagedb2470
    @salvagedb2470 Před rokem +8

    The Dam Busters is right there with The Battle of Britain , for me ..A legend of a Film with great Acting and Model / real footage for its Time a Winner forever.

  • @prsearls
    @prsearls Před 3 lety +18

    One of the greatest WWII films; I've watched it many times and enjoyed it immensely each time. I'll need to get the remastered version. The skill and heroism of those crews are well portrayed and the sight and sound of those Lancasters is wonderful. The photography, especially the aerial photography, is superb. The special effects in 1954 are nothing compared to today's computer generated effects. Nevertheless, you get the idea of the danger and incredible skill required for this mission.

  • @francislintonellis8402
    @francislintonellis8402 Před 3 lety +89

    A wonderful documentary when being proud to be British was a good thing

    • @catinthehat906
      @catinthehat906 Před 3 lety +8

      The interesting thing is that this film and the two of the other classics of the genre, The Great Escape and Reach for the Sky that are seen as quintessentially British, were taken from books of the same name by Australian fighter pilot Paul Brickhill.

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 Před 3 lety +1

      @@catinthehat906 he also wrote the Dam Busters

    • @davman115
      @davman115 Před 3 lety +5

      @@catinthehat906 Same thing. We are made from the same mold.

    • @philipmonaghan8267
      @philipmonaghan8267 Před 3 lety +8

      It still is something to be proud of!!!

    • @mikeross4
      @mikeross4 Před rokem +6

      It still is!

  • @funkyalfonso
    @funkyalfonso Před 3 lety +9

    Seeing this film as a boy had an impact on me as my late father was a friend of the brother of RAF Officer Ottley who was shot down and killed in C for Charlie in the third wave. RIP.

  • @tiamatxvxianash9202
    @tiamatxvxianash9202 Před 6 měsíci +4

    Like the gentleman emphasized at the end, this story is about immortality. The final scene in the Damuster's film when guy Gibson walks off; he does so into eternity, into his own special place in Valhalla. From the epic tales of old, like Xenophon's 10,000, up to the more modern stories of heroism like Scott and Shackleton, all of us have benefited infinitely by these examples of selfless devotion to the most righteous principles of man's existence.

  • @mycroft1905
    @mycroft1905 Před 3 lety +18

    Thank you for posting this documentary about the making of a film that I have treasured since I first saw it in childhood.

  • @lisaburnett3368
    @lisaburnett3368 Před 3 lety +18

    Thank you. And we should never forget the heroism of the guys who were in this. It's stands for what and who we are. God bless x

  • @nigeldewallens1115
    @nigeldewallens1115 Před 3 lety +37

    I would love to see this film as it once was! Well done to the people that did this! This film has always touched me as my dad lost his brother who was a navigator back then! My mum was in the WRAF and died in September 2019 aged 95! We used to talk about those days and mum gave me a real flavour, just as my dad did with the work he did back then! Hence me loving this film as it is historical as well as factual! This documentary has been well done too! Thank you for doing this great work to allow us an insight on this wonderful and poignant film! R.I.P all the men in Bomber Command and all of the RAF and ARMY and NAVY in WWII We can never thank you enough!

  • @peterscotney1
    @peterscotney1 Před 3 lety +9

    What an excellent documentary! I grew up watching great films like this....the highlight of my week would be when my dad would let us stay up late on Saturday night to watch the big war movies !

  • @bodieofci5418
    @bodieofci5418 Před 4 lety +19

    Superb film. The books are even better. I have fond memories of my grandad reading me the book as a bedtime story and then seeing the film with him and my dad.

  • @lazyhazeldaisy9596
    @lazyhazeldaisy9596 Před 4 lety +18

    I love this film not only because I have always adored Richard Todd but the Lancaster's are just wonderful the sound of those engines are magnificent. If I was only allowed to have one film this would be it.

  • @Chucklesrailarchive
    @Chucklesrailarchive Před rokem +4

    In my book The Dam Busters is the best British film ever made. I always get a tear when when Richard Tod says he has letters to write at the end of the film.

    • @JamesRichards-mj9kw
      @JamesRichards-mj9kw Před rokem +1

      The failed Operation Chastise murdered thousands of civilians and Allied POWs.

  • @keithbartlett4909
    @keithbartlett4909 Před 3 lety +5

    Thanks for a very informative documentary, so much background material included. The film its self is a masterpiece, well acted and capturing something of the raid itself. The pressures on the crews to train and carry out that mission is hard to comprehend and all such young men. Then, of course, there's Wallis himself having to pull it all together in such a short time. They truly were 'men of their time'. Documentaries with modern pilots flying so called re-enactments never fail to be astonished at what was achieved in that raid. An indication of their ability was revealed to me some years ago when a documentary featuring Ken Brown, the Canadian pilot, who flew in the back-up wave of planes explained something of his experience that night. Ordered to bomb the Sorpe dam, he relates arriving over it and only seeing the church steeple above the mist. He carried out his attack after having to do a stall turn in his Lancaster. Such a manoeuvre beggars belief with a plane of that size. I wonder if he warned the crew...

  • @maggiel.516
    @maggiel.516 Před rokem +2

    This was a cracking good documentary. I also enjoyed the person practising piano in the background.

  • @melvyncox3361
    @melvyncox3361 Před 3 lety +12

    Excellent documentary of one or the best films ever,the others being The Battle of Britain,The Blue Max,and 633 Squadron.
    All great films!

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety +2

      Tbh I wouldn't include The Blue Max or 633 Squadron because neither were based on true stories.

    • @timmymcneive7975
      @timmymcneive7975 Před 3 lety

      633 squadron:the winners flying over to bomb the losers so they can’t use atomic bombs.CLASSIC🤑🤕

  • @stevemance2812
    @stevemance2812 Před 3 lety +7

    An amazing documentary and tribute to all those involved in Operation Chastise, and to those involved in making a much love classic British World War 2 movie.

  • @stevedavies5553
    @stevedavies5553 Před rokem +5

    Thank u for posting this. Dambusters is 1 of my favourite films. I can honestly say i enjoyed it immensely. Very Very brave men and may we never forget what the brave crews did. I was once asked if i had chance to sit down with anyone from the past who has died i always reply
    1 My mother
    2 Barnes wallace
    I always rember in the film when Mr Wallace is asked
    How do you suggest i get Bomber command to allow you to use one of there aeroplanes Mr Wallace ?
    He replys ,perhaps if you tell them i designed it
    Case Closed

  • @Bulletguy07
    @Bulletguy07 Před 3 lety +10

    I was always in awe of Michael Redgraves portrayal of Barnes Wallis. His acting was superb and exactly how I imagined the real Barnes Wallis to be.

    • @anthonyeaton5153
      @anthonyeaton5153 Před 3 lety +4

      Barnes Wallis was not as portrayed. He was sharp and decisive and not the grnteel

  • @christianluts810
    @christianluts810 Před 3 lety +22

    Quite a good documentary spoiled by the addition of tuneless music and the bizarre overlay of faux pencil "mark-up" graphics.

    • @anthonydavis5779
      @anthonydavis5779 Před 3 lety

      The volume of the background music is ok with the narration but too loud for the interviews.

  • @edwardfalcus7013
    @edwardfalcus7013 Před 3 lety +5

    I was stationed at RAF Hemswell (along with fred trueman) when they were making this film and remember the lancasters taking off/landing - wish i'd had my smartphone in those days!

  • @Bruce-1956
    @Bruce-1956 Před 3 lety +37

    The crew are still heroes to me even after all these years. I pay my respects to them as often as possible. Last week Les Knight. #wewillrememberthem

    • @googleit2824
      @googleit2824 Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah bcos MichaelKingsfordGray really is your name.
      Signed G

    • @colindale1562
      @colindale1562 Před 3 lety

      @MichaelKingsfordGray Redundant Person

  • @colinthomas5462
    @colinthomas5462 Před rokem +2

    Excellent documentary of a great film and a piece of British history that must be preserved.

  • @neiltully4579
    @neiltully4579 Před 3 lety +29

    Sadly RAF Scampton is now under threat, surely we can’t allow such an important base to become yet another faceless housing estate....history such as this is priceless, otherwise what’s the point in all this sacrifice.......

    • @stephenburgess5109
      @stephenburgess5109 Před 3 lety

      It was the same with fate of HMS Plymouth the Warship that took the surrender of the Argentine Forces in South Georgia in 82 and turned into a museum ship in Birkenhead until the council wanted the berth it was offered to Plymouth but rejected and ended up being scrapped in Turkey.

    • @redbird9658
      @redbird9658 Před 3 lety +6

      Too many people dont care any more. Schools not teaching history and patriotism.
      No morning prayers, traditions trampled on. Instead of including all religions they have banned ours.
      Its a Godless society they want.

    • @stephenburgess5109
      @stephenburgess5109 Před 3 lety +4

      Red Bird but they all now all the 100 different genders and the names of all the reality stars

    • @jackywhite880
      @jackywhite880 Před 3 lety +4

      It says on the Cenotaph and other monuments "We shall never forget."
      Most people forgot years ago, both to remember and to care.

    • @jackywhite880
      @jackywhite880 Před 3 lety +3

      @@redbird9658
      I'm a godless man too - and make no apologies.
      Which is why I fail to see what religion has to do either with patriotism, the protection of the country, or with remembering those who served - not just in combat, but in every possible sort of way.

  • @rustykilt
    @rustykilt Před 3 lety +20

    Hollywood, take note, this is how you make a fine movie, and a brilliant war movie. It is understated, but portrays the reality of air warfare, with emphasis placed on the Characters portrayed, just ordinary men facing the likelihood of death. There are no Hysterics, soap opera performances, or deliberate handwringing emotion to play the audience. Its told with all the realism of a generation now virtually gone, their ideals and attitudes, beliefs and standards which today have little meaning. The film remains a classic that today may hold more relevance as pride in your country and to fight for your beliefs , no matter the sacrifice , appears to be an archaic concept.

    • @jimcrawford5039
      @jimcrawford5039 Před 3 lety +7

      Remake of Midway, Dunkirk & pearl Harbour et all. Rubbish compared to the originals!

    • @edmundscycles1
      @edmundscycles1 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jimcrawford5039 I liked Dunkirk but also hated it . The aircraft nerd in me counted 42 seconds of gun fire from the spitfire Mki when it only carried enough ammo for 14 seconds of fire .
      It did stretch things a little far in places but at least it was mostly realistic and used real 109's and spitfires .

    • @andrewoliver8930
      @andrewoliver8930 Před 3 lety

      @@jimcrawford5039 The original Battle of Midway isn't that great.

    • @tommycockles2947
      @tommycockles2947 Před rokem

      hollywood couldnt make a film like the dambusters if they tried, unless it was with americans stealing british achievements .even the russians make better films than hollywood

  • @bigbow62
    @bigbow62 Před 3 lety +3

    Classic movie... so glad I found this documentary !
    Brave men,courageous & love of country... thank them one and all from heart !

  • @rowanhawklan9707
    @rowanhawklan9707 Před 3 lety +5

    Between the age of 5 and 8 I sat on my father's lap and watched this film twice of a Sunday afternoon, my farther cried on both occasions, he died at 52 when I was 10.
    Watching this documentary at 51 I now am old enough to know why it affected him as it did, not only since it brings back memories of my farther (who served in the army at the end of the war) but as it reminds us of the ultimate sacrifice people made fighting the curse of Nazi Germany and their allies.

  • @bobskimaxx
    @bobskimaxx Před 3 lety +22

    Excellent documentary and my most loved film. Brave men all of them.

  • @monkeyspankerful
    @monkeyspankerful Před 3 lety +5

    Lovely to see the making of one of the true classics.

  • @neilfurby555
    @neilfurby555 Před rokem +2

    Excellent, a great tribute to a magnificent movie making project.

  • @richardmabe4186
    @richardmabe4186 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I loved this film from being a child, I admired the bravery of the airmen, the Lancaster's and the story of inspired Barnes Wallis. The music stills stirs me and makes me tearful with pride. If only war wasn't such a tragic ghastly waste.

  • @ajg617
    @ajg617 Před 3 lety +8

    Riveting film first shown in the US on broadcast television in the 1960s. Cemented my love of the Avro Lancaster and the bravery of 617 Sqdn. One of two films that had a profound impact on me as a teen. Pestered my parents for the Brickhill book and Enemy Coast Ahead. Years later with the purchase of our first VHS player in the late '70s, went to the store selling VHS tapes to to my amazement found The Dam Busters. Bought that and Star Wars Episode IV ("I'd say there's 10 guns, some in the fields and some in the towers'). Each tape was was over $70US. Please release the restored version in Region One!

    • @COIcultist
      @COIcultist Před 3 lety

      One wants to pay fair dues but if films are not available in hard copy try other online sources. Might I recommend OK Russia, I do promise that is not a dodgy site and I have found WWII films I never knew existed. To find a genre of films look up a film that you know then look at what else that poster has uploaded. Might I suggest as a starter "The Foreman Went To France" which I doubt many have seen. A film made during WWII.

  • @coolhand1964
    @coolhand1964 Před 4 měsíci +3

    It's been written that Barnes Wallace suffered greatly from grief and guilt over the loss of lives on the raid and was never the same enthusiast man after. Some idiots claim the raid was a failure because Germany re-built the dams, when the disruption to German manufacturing and morale boost to the UK were dramatic. Unfortunately they did not do follow up raids when the dams were being repaired, even high level bombing, it is felt by historians that this would have driven home the initial success of the first raid. It is also worth noting the age of those on the raid. They were all just out of their teens. Brave men every one of them.

  • @adriandchadburn2612
    @adriandchadburn2612 Před 3 lety +1

    In about 1967 was at a recruitment evening for local Air Training Corps. Barnes Wallis gave a talk about his career followed by a showing of The Dam Busters.

  • @chuckabutty888
    @chuckabutty888 Před rokem +3

    A wonderful documentary. Films like this should be shown on Rememberance Day to educate our young generations as to how they have the freedom they have today from the heroism and sacrifices of our forefathers.

    • @JamesRichards-mj9kw
      @JamesRichards-mj9kw Před rokem +1

      The UK was denying half of the world its freedom in 1943.

    • @Laidback61
      @Laidback61 Před rokem +2

      Yes... a double bill with The Battle of Britain !

    • @JamesRichards-mj9kw
      @JamesRichards-mj9kw Před rokem

      @@Laidback61 That awful flop lost $10 million worldwide.

  • @davidscarrett3804
    @davidscarrett3804 Před 3 lety +4

    My late father was an engineering officer with 617 he didn't talk much about what happened but on the rare occasion he did talk some really funny stories were told.

    • @kenstevens5065
      @kenstevens5065 Před 2 lety +1

      Funny stories are still told in stress situations in many workplaces today as were common in my service career, a human safety valve in fact. Frowned upon by many today. Much better to be sent for expensive counselling by an expert who looks about 12.

  • @derekjohnston1183
    @derekjohnston1183 Před 3 lety +36

    These men were prepared to sacrifice their lives.

    • @davidbrouwers7309
      @davidbrouwers7309 Před 3 lety +2

      S/L Young's crew received the first hit by the Ack Ack in my home town, the 2nd by the Ack Ack in the town where I went to school, they crashed near the coast of Castricum trying to land on a sandbar.
      The entire crew was killed on the return flight of the Dam raid.
      To me this raid has faces and names as well as a story.

    • @concise707
      @concise707 Před rokem +1

      53 of the 133 participants did......

  • @smac4749
    @smac4749 Před 3 lety +12

    Excellent documentary, a fitting tribute to a wonderful, moving film which itself was a fitting tribute to those who risked their lives and those who made the ultimate sacrifice.

  • @gary6300
    @gary6300 Před 3 lety +2

    Hi great documentary really interesting I've read alot about the dambusters and it's just amazing how they pulled the operation off I mean flying at 60ft in the dark the crews had guts to fly so low just amazing!! thank you for sharing. cheers Gary from the 🇬🇧

  • @MalcG4NXL
    @MalcG4NXL Před rokem +2

    This film seems very personal to me I was born on 17 May 1944 12 months after the raid don't know how many times iv'e watched it but the last time wont be the last time

  • @ThePierre58
    @ThePierre58 Před 2 lety +1

    The Dambuster movie is a permanent fixture on my laptop. It stands the test of time, even the lack of CGI works.

  • @sparky4152003
    @sparky4152003 Před 3 lety +2

    I met Gilbert Taylor 'Gil' the camera man - he retired to the Isle of Wight, which is where I met him and whilst working at his house found out about his time as a camera man in Star Wars, I had no idea until now of just how many films he was involved in including the Dam Busters - fantastic filming of course.

    • @paulstroud2647
      @paulstroud2647 Před 3 lety

      I believe George Lucas used the attack sequence as inspiration for the final battle in Star Wars, maybe not a coincidence?

  • @jonnyh9388
    @jonnyh9388 Před 3 lety

    A thoroughly enjoyable documentary about this iconic film. Many thanks for showing it.

  • @johnreed3638
    @johnreed3638 Před 3 lety

    Excellent documentary on perhaps the best war movie ever made. The sacrifices those young men went through should never be forgotten.

  • @sharanbirbrijnath549
    @sharanbirbrijnath549 Před 3 lety +5

    A brilliant documentary....well done

  • @Bob-Horse
    @Bob-Horse Před rokem +1

    Lovely documentary. I also understand that two of Barnes Wallis’ relatives were in the film. The Testing tank at Teddington scene, that guy with glasses at the back of the crew firing the balls and, the lady in the pit recording the impact of the ball against the mocked-up wall.

  • @Filscout
    @Filscout Před 3 lety +2

    Peter Jackson's Company had already received TEN life size fiberglass mock ups Lancaster from China delivered to his studio in New Zealand. They assembled one to see how it looked . All being put in storage after the project was cancelled.

  • @mikemyers8064
    @mikemyers8064 Před rokem +2

    👍🏻🇬🇧The Best of British Character that we all tried to live up to. Now, standards , integrity, honour and respect are in the gutter.

  • @stephenmoss2554
    @stephenmoss2554 Před 3 lety +5

    Good doc but a couple of comments. The big secret of the bomb was not its shape but the fact that it was spun backwards. It was originally barrel shaped but kept breaking up when impacting the water. They found that the cylindrical core performed almost as well.
    Also consider one of the best scenes was where crews waiting to take off. Read somewhere that it was the longest single take at the time.
    Consider this contender for best war film ever made.

    • @joylunn3445
      @joylunn3445 Před 3 lety

      Also Richard Todd and Robert Shaw had been trained to get the Lancaster to the point of take-off.

  • @richardmacdonald6303
    @richardmacdonald6303 Před 3 lety +3

    Got a snicker, I was watching this and checked my computer's clock and it was 6:17.

  • @olwens1368
    @olwens1368 Před 3 lety +5

    I realised some years ago that war films made in the 50s/60s and even 70s were so much better than modern ones because the men who acted in them had usually been in the services, even if not actually during the war. Thus they knew how to stand, walk, react to and give commands. I think the difference for me was highlighted by the differences between the 'Colditz' story TV series in the mid 70s and one made about 20 years ago. Also better scripts, less political correctness etc etc- but I still think it's a significant factor.

  • @aaaht3810
    @aaaht3810 Před 3 lety +2

    One of my favorite movies. Very well done.

  • @Charlesputnam-bn9zy
    @Charlesputnam-bn9zy Před 3 lety

    This movie was shown in my country in 1957 & how did I was raring to see it.
    Then on that Sunday I was coming to the scene of the successful experiment and power failure !
    The theater stamped our tickets for watching on Monday. Bad luck I couldn't skip school !
    So I had to wait until 2002 to get the DVD.
    It was worth the wait !

  • @petop8290
    @petop8290 Před 3 lety

    Awesome documentary. How it was put together, the interview, narration and even the music in the background. You know its a good documentary when you spend the next few hours on the internet looking up for more about the raid. If it does go ahead, Peter Jackson had a lot to live up for if he makes an updated Dambusters.

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety

      Peter Jackson has already cancelled his plans for a remake partially due to the problems surrounding Guy Gibson's dog!

  • @franl155
    @franl155 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this. I can't find words to say how much I enjoyed it.
    I remember reading The Dam Busters in the 60s - the details of the bomb, what it did and how it did it, weren't mentioned in that edition of the book, which must have been one of the very early print runs when security was still quite tight. [Enemy Coast Ahead was even more so, but that was written while the war was still going on]. I was surprised when I saw the film and realised, oh, THAT's what it was!
    re the shape of the bomb: I had an Airfix Dambuster Lancaster model kit - and it, too, had a cylindrical bomb, "just like the film"
    Brickhill also wrote a couple of books of stories; one was called "Jump for it!", about airmen whose lives had been saved by parachutes; I can't remember what the other was called but I'm sure there was another.

  • @petergrist8577
    @petergrist8577 Před 3 lety +7

    Nice documentary about an amazing film, such a shame it was interrupted every five minutes by adverts.

  • @johnharney6548
    @johnharney6548 Před 3 měsíci +1

    We were on holiday in Margate in 1955 , we went to the pictures to see this film and couldn’t get in it was sold out.

  • @306champion
    @306champion Před 3 lety

    It was made just before I was born. It's a movie that will always be engrained in my memory.
    The fact that it' real, a "true story" only made it better.

  • @sunseeker8457
    @sunseeker8457 Před 3 lety +5

    After the war. Most people involved with the operation. Pilots, Wallis suffered a lot of guilt and wondered afterwards the cost of all the lives lost. Not only the pilots lost. But the surviving pilots guilt was about the villages and the people living around the Dams that were all killed. But if these Dams were no destroyed. So many more lives would have been lost in the war.

  • @BradBrassman
    @BradBrassman Před 3 lety +1

    Great documentary. I am a native of Grantham and my grandfather worked at the Ministry of Public Works at St Vincents (which was the HQ of 5 Group, Bomber Command) in the 60's when the caretaker there was the same chap that was there during the war. He gave my grandfather a couple of old postcards of the Mohne Dam that the Air Ministry had asked people to come forward with for info regarding possible targets etc. It seems there were quite a number of postcards of items or interest for possible targets and he was ordered to dispose of these after the war, but he kept these two for posterity. It turned out that one of the civil engineers who worked on the Ladybower Dam in the early 30's had gone over to Germany in the late 20's and early 30's to study the Mohne and on the back of one of the postcards is a load of technical stuff about the dam. I expect these should go to the right museum one day, but I cant make my mind up which?

    • @Laidback61
      @Laidback61 Před rokem

      I would suggest the RAF Museum 😊

    • @BradBrassman
      @BradBrassman Před rokem

      @@Laidback61 ....or the one in the towers at Ladybower?

  • @jeffreyedwards609
    @jeffreyedwards609 Před 3 lety +5

    Very well done video.

  • @TheBaron481
    @TheBaron481 Před 3 lety +4

    Superb - thanks you

  • @roberthenderson4922
    @roberthenderson4922 Před 3 lety

    The Dam buster film was originally printed/ processed at my grandfathers film laboratory (Henderson's Film Laboratories) in Norwood south London. In the film the footage of the bombs being dropped at the beach (Hearn Bay, Kent) was also printed in the war at Henderson's film labs

  • @johnfiler6448
    @johnfiler6448 Před 2 lety +1

    Great film, it makes you proud to be British - even in these covid times. Well made documentary. Thank you.

  • @fraserhayes4
    @fraserhayes4 Před 3 lety +11

    Does anyone else find the music really irritating?

    • @brianaustin8989
      @brianaustin8989 Před 3 lety +2

      NO

    • @Bigbro28
      @Bigbro28 Před 3 lety

      Surely you jest? If not ... yah boo knickers! 🐨🇦🇺

    • @olwens1368
      @olwens1368 Před 3 lety

      Do you mean the background music to this programme- in which case, not really- or the Dambusters march- in which case the answer is- Are you kidding??

    • @fraserhayes4
      @fraserhayes4 Před 3 lety +2

      @@olwens1368 The Dambusters March is a great classic but the incidental music to this documentary sounds cheap and sloppy. Like it was made by one man using an electric keyboard and not much else. Seems a shame to me.

  • @colingrant767
    @colingrant767 Před 3 lety +6

    enjoyed this doc thanks

  •  Před 7 měsíci +2

    Robert Shaw also starred in James Bond's "From Russia with Love", and portrayed the fanatical nazi Panzer commander in the "Battle of the Bulge" (his hair being dyed blond for the occasion)

  • @organicpaul
    @organicpaul Před 3 lety +2

    Nice documentry!

  • @lazyhazeldaisy9596
    @lazyhazeldaisy9596 Před 3 lety +7

    My Father in the early fifties was in the RAF for a few years he had never been in a plane in his life and the first time he had to go on recognisance for ten hours in a Lancaster, he said it was great being up at the front in the bomb aimers seat and I said 'Yeah not so great getting shot at at night though' where he said 'Er well no!'

  • @mickyday2008
    @mickyday2008 Před rokem +2

    Great documentary

  • @264Rockape
    @264Rockape Před 4 lety +10

    Brilliant film

  • @dubchile
    @dubchile Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great stuff, a most enlightening documentary.
    First time I'd seen this account about the movie.
    No mention about the dag of course.. (heh, I mean to say that's pc gone plumb crazy).
    And Robert Shaw, I had no idea about the part he played at all. That detail had slipped past me throughout all the countless times I'd watched the flim.
    I had already been aware of Patrick McGoughan's part however.
    I have a feeling that this is a rare example of a flim without Sam Kydd's name on the credits?
    How can this be?
    The most prolific actor of the era and he wasn't included in the cast of the Dam Busters!
    The orderly who told Gibson about his dag's accident bore a slight resemblance to Kydd but it wasn't he.
    I agree about the ending being the most poignant moment, when Gibson replies to Barnes-Wallis "No, I'm afraid I have some letters to write first.."
    I'm so glad I bought the DVD box-set when I did several years ago of a/ The Dam Busters, Ice Cold In Alex and The Cruel Sea.
    Sam Kydd was in the latter but perhaps not in John Mills' adventure. I may be wrong?

  • @BenLewis-ni1zb
    @BenLewis-ni1zb Před 7 měsíci

    Gibson went to my old school, we got a fly past on the 50th anniversary.
    I used to coach at RC Sheriffs old school, the boat house I coached from was call- RC Sheriff Boat House!

  • @tracysrocket
    @tracysrocket Před 3 lety +1

    Is the restored version available in the USA Region 1?

  • @andrewoliver8930
    @andrewoliver8930 Před 3 lety +16

    If only some people could name all the crew that lost their lives.
    Instead, they obsess about a dog with a rude name.
    Some people's priorities are funny.

    • @davidbrouwers7309
      @davidbrouwers7309 Před 3 lety +1

      S/L Young's crew received the first hit by the Ack Ack in my home town, the 2nd by the Ack Ack in the town where I went to school, they crashed near the coast of Castricum trying to land on a sandbar.
      The entire crew was killed on the return flight of the Dam raid.
      To me this raid has faces and names as well as a story.
      I make sure that at least that crew is remembered, I tell the story, share the photos of the entire crew when possible and list all of their names on the 17th of May every year.

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety

      Haven't seen you naming all the crew that lost their lives yet! Put up or shut up!

    • @andrewoliver8930
      @andrewoliver8930 Před 3 lety +2

      @@B-A-L That's not the point of my comment. If someone is so obsessed with a dog's name rather than the crew who flew, their priorities are wrong.
      Dog with amusingly offensive name v crew names. Which one is more important?

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety +5

      @@andrewoliver8930 The name of the dog isn't the issue it's the fact we are having to censor our history to avoid offending a minority that is only here because it has been afforded the freedom to do so due to the brave actions of people such as portrayed in this movie.

    • @andrewoliver8930
      @andrewoliver8930 Před 3 lety +1

      @@B-A-L I'm sure Churchill covered up a few things and didn't want the truth out.
      That sort of censorship is fine.
      Not giving Bomber Command because he got a bit embarrassed by the deaths in Germany.
      Never quite gets shown on his films of the great man.

  • @evertonmignac-D7101
    @evertonmignac-D7101 Před 3 lety +2

    This was a great video that solved my curiosities about this movie,I wish there was an remake of The dam busters in the 2020s decade.

    • @redbird9658
      @redbird9658 Před 3 lety +5

      They would never get it right because of political correctness.
      There would be people insisting on ethnic minorities being involved, even if there were none in reality.
      Not to mention guys dogs name being a problem for some. The name has already been wiped from the dogs grave.
      Historical facts would be ignored and it would never capture the real event.

    • @evertonmignac-D7101
      @evertonmignac-D7101 Před 3 lety

      I suppose that's the case then@@redbird9658 ,the only option would've been watch the original then but I wouldn't mind it was just an idea; still nothing would've beat the originals of back then with CGI.

    • @redbird9658
      @redbird9658 Před 3 lety +2

      @@evertonmignac-D7101 yes i know what you mean.

    • @jimcrawford5039
      @jimcrawford5039 Před 3 lety +4

      Peter Jackson has the remake rights but I don’t think he willl ever make it.

    • @jimcrawford5039
      @jimcrawford5039 Před 3 lety +5

      By remakes made today with their CGI, they just go overboard with it and make crap.

  • @nigelscott1922
    @nigelscott1922 Před 3 lety +14

    Wish there were still four flying Lancaster’s today.

    • @markanthony4655
      @markanthony4655 Před 3 lety +7

      3 Lancaster's may be a possibility one day. The Panton brothers "Just Jane" (NX611) at East Kirby is being slowly restored to full flying condition, then we have the RAF's BBMF "City of Lincoln" (PA474) and also the Canadian Lancaster. One day hopefully all 3 will fly together during a UK air show season.

    • @LaserEnginesAGC
      @LaserEnginesAGC Před 3 lety +5

      @@markanthony4655 FM104 is also under restoration to airworthy in Canada so 4 is not impossible

    • @markanthony4655
      @markanthony4655 Před 3 lety +1

      @@LaserEnginesAGC Excellent stuff, didn't realise their was a possibility of another Lanc in the air too. Fantastic stuff.

    • @garyk1334
      @garyk1334 Před 3 lety

      @@markanthony4655 Two have flown together in Canada with a mossy & some spits I recently watched a video of the flight shot from the mossy cockpit I'll see if I can post a link

    • @garyk1334
      @garyk1334 Před 3 lety +1

      @@markanthony4655 See if this works czcams.com/video/nM2ZQj6YjiA/video.html

  • @rbrooks2007
    @rbrooks2007 Před 3 lety +1

    It's such a shame that Leighton Lucas who did the score for the film is forgotten in the musical section of this documentary. The four note motif (ECAG in the key of C which the march is in) in the CZcams clip 'The Dam Busters (1955) - Re-created Main Titles in HD Colour' serving as a good example, starts at 1:08 and almost speaks Leighton's name (E - [Leigh] - C [ton] A -[Lu] G-[cas]) in various keys throughout the film and has Leighton's second theme with some reworking of Coates' main piece until 1:34.

    • @davefave4351
      @davefave4351 Před 6 měsíci

      Much like an Igor Stravinsky 'signature'!

  • @paulswarbrick7098
    @paulswarbrick7098 Před rokem

    Does anyone know the name of the track used as music in the documentary itself by James Rogers?

  • @andypandy9013
    @andypandy9013 Před rokem

    Excellent! 👍

  • @tarquin4592
    @tarquin4592 Před 3 lety +12

    What must they think when they look down upon on the Britain of today?

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety

      @John Cornell And yet we aren't even allowed to mention the name of a dog because we don't want to offend a minority that won't stop using the very same word!

    • @bar10ml44
      @bar10ml44 Před 3 lety

      @John Cornell I hope you were wearing a mask and didn’t travel out your allowed area. Safe spaces required for people who get hurt feelings, 150,000? waiting for NHS treatment, GP consultations by phone, political correctness gone crazy, a completely dysfunctional education and political system with a 2 trillion plus deficit. A decimated military force and a police force not fit for purpose. Black Lives Matter and extinction rebellion get free passes while old ladies get thrown to the ground then handcuffed and taken away. Thousands of illegal arrivals escorted ashore while we were locked down. Sure everything is superb.

  • @michaelwhittaker5432
    @michaelwhittaker5432 Před 3 lety +3

    A fantastic piece of accuracy was filming `Gibson ` ( Todd ) with out a flying jacket he flew in shirt sleeves as he new the flight path would not be at high altitude and so quite warm. For the real techy guys they even found a w.w.2 German Airforce life vest ( noticeable by the small horizontal oxygen bottle at the base ) Gibson actually used one on the raid, oh and next time you watch the film right at the very end when Wallis is taking to Gibson about all the deaths .. look center left of picture you will see a very feint black dog running about ...a ghost ?? well it wasn't there in production ! trust me its there and remember this is the man who said to his co pilot as they made their approach to the dam ' get ready to drag me out of my seat and take over if Im shot '

  • @DRMEEKS
    @DRMEEKS Před 3 lety +1

    The narrator has a wonderful delivery.

  • @akkersja
    @akkersja Před 3 lety

    Very interesting.

  • @angloaust1575
    @angloaust1575 Před 3 lety +10

    When Gibson toured the usa after the raid the americans were amazed at his number of missions 174
    Their airmen only had to do 25
    Before going home

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 Před 3 lety

      99 of them were on Beaufighter night fighters of 29 Squadron between his first and second bomber tours (tour length was 100 flying hours or 18 months, which ever came first). His first tour with 83 Squadron was based on operational flying hours, not number of sorties (27 or 34 in total dependant on source). His third tour as CO of 106 Squadron was 46 missions which was over double the number he actually had to do to complete that tour (20 maximum at that time). He volunteered to do both the Night Fighter and 2nd Bomber tours to get out of a Training job.

    • @COIcultist
      @COIcultist Před 3 lety +4

      The number of required missions from American airmen increased as the war went on. See The Lucky Bastard Club en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucky_Bastard_Club. Several Americans may well have done more flights. Look up the war record of Major General James Stewart. Not just a great actor but a true American hero.

    • @grogery1570
      @grogery1570 Před 3 lety

      @@richardvernon317 The thing that stuck with me from "Enemy Coast ahead" was that Gibson accepted a transfer to Beau fighters after his first tour in bombers was complete because he needed a rest. After a year in Beau fighters he wanted to go back to bombers and seemed to not understand people thinking he needed a rest, he had just had a year off!

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 Před 3 lety

      @@grogery1570 Gibson was a Career Officer, He wasn't going to turn down an offer that could advance his career. He was somewhat cherry picked for the 29 Sqn post because of his skill as a night flyer and the transfer happened because AOC in C Fighter Command asked his opposite number in Bomber Command to give him some good blokes (at night flying). Gibson was at the top of the tree as this regard at the time. I suspect that his attitude and temperament were not that which makes a good instructor and that he was fully aware of this. Being a Night Fighter pilot wasn't as risky as flying a bomber over Germany, but it was hardly risk free either. He was a very good night fighter pilot but he was never in the right place at the right time to rack up the kills like Cunningham on 604 or Braham , the other flight commander on 29 did.

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety

      @@COIcultist They may have done even more if they had bothered to join in right from the start! Actually that's not necessarily true because the war could have been over before the end of 1940.

  • @markanthony4655
    @markanthony4655 Před 3 lety +13

    It is a shame that a newer film will not be historically correct as I have no doubt, that Guy Gibson's dog will be missed out due to PC.

    • @Bruce-1956
      @Bruce-1956 Před 3 lety +1

      They will/have given it another name.

    • @chrisreynolds7164
      @chrisreynolds7164 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Bruce-1956 Rumoured to be Digger

    • @Dezzasheep
      @Dezzasheep Před 3 lety +3

      Digger the gender neutral pet rabbit.

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety +3

      Peter Jackson cancelled his remake a few years ago because of this.

    • @markanthony4655
      @markanthony4655 Před 3 lety +2

      @@B-A-L It is a shame an historic fact, and it is a fact is cancelled because of political changes and views. You can't change history, just learn from it. But you can't change the facts that have already happened.

  • @markjennings2315
    @markjennings2315 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic doco about a fantastic story about fantastic people.

  • @topcat073
    @topcat073 Před 3 lety +1

    A remake would be fraught with controversy. Not so much the dog who could easily be written out as it has no real part in the story but with a lot of the consequences. These bombs would be considered weapons of mass destruction today and the breaching of the dams caused a huge amount of what we would call collateral damage. This I believe included large numbers of forced laborers who were locked in their barracks and unable to escape the floodwaters. Wallis was a genius who worked on everything from steamships to rigid airships (the history of the R100 is an untold story of its own) and swing-wing jets. The Dambusters march is a truly great piece of music. I've been very fortunate to hear it live many times as my children's brass band used to play it as a stage march. Never failed to bring a lump to my throat.

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L Před 3 lety +2

      So how do you remake the movie without changing the codeword for the destruction of the Mohne Dam? Also regarding weapons of mass destruction and collateral damage does it mean there won't be anymore movies about Hiroshima too?

    • @topcat073
      @topcat073 Před 3 lety +2

      @@B-A-L Very easily actually. In the movie, it is glossed over that the third dam wasn't breached. This has led to a few armchair generals arguing that the raid wasn't a success, or at best partially successful. The collateral damage issue is another story. An incendiary bomb weighs only a few kilograms but they caused tens of thousands of deaths worldwide. As Stalin put it one death is a tragedy a million is a statistic. The "was this a legitimate military action or a war crime?" debate is a tin of worms no one wants to open.

  • @ZacYates
    @ZacYates Před 3 lety +1

    What a fantastic work! I don’t understand the pencil/chalk marks, I found them very distracting.

  • @oo0Spyder0oo
    @oo0Spyder0oo Před rokem

    so is this on 4k anywhere because I can't find it.